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jcpearce wrote:
Thanks for the input Aluminum can act as an RF shield but not as a magnetic field shield, given that the interference is in the RF band I figured aluminum would be OK (and to keep it light) but some iron based material would do both and perhaps is a better choice. Using the PC architecture has so many advantages (and obviously at the moment a showstopper bug), I can easily store the history of a trip on a removable USB card, on this USB card is a directory for music that can be played and piped into the stereo intercom, high tech displays with graphs, charts, etc.. is easy, it is inexpensive, and easy to program with high level languages. Doing the assembly on the 8051 data controller was interesting but to do the same functions as described above would be very very hard (for me). I have gone so far down this road I am loath to junk it (even if that is the right thing to do) and tell myself if I bang my head against the wall enough times the answer will show up. I know people use their laptops in cockpits without this problem so there must be a way. Hi, JC! Actually, any highly conductive box with minimal gaps will shield against magnetic field intrusion. The way it works is that the incident magnetic field generates a current in the metal surface, and this current then in itself produces a magnetic field which opposes the original one. That is why it is very important to use highly conductive material and to have highly conductive, well-sealed joints. By the way, RF doesn't reflect from a metal surface; the field generates a current in the surface, which in turn radiates the energy, This is why the counterpoise (ground-plane) to be effective must be of high conductivity for good 1/4 wave antenna radiation. Aluminum and copper make very good enclosures, both for RFI and EMI. Soft aluminum, such as 1100 0, is the best and has an IACS relative resistance of 1.69 making it more conductive than some of the harder alloys such as 2017 T4 and 2024 T4 which are 3.33, double that of 1100, or 5056 H18 at 3.70. Don't use brass; it's not as good as aluminum. I had a small circuit that had to have extreme isolation from incident fields to work properly. I made a box out of double-sided circuit board, and soldered all the inner surfaces together as well as all of the outer surfaces except the lid, which had conductive fingers all the way around on the inside, then soldered on the outside. Worked great! You might try this if it is just to be a one-off. Here're some references you might find informative: Interference Handbook, Nelson, Radio Publications Inc., 1981; Grounding and Shielding Techniques in Instrumentation, Morrison, Wiley, 1967; Good grounding and shielding practices, Electronic Design, 1977 Jan. 04, p.110; Sniffer probe locates sources of EMI, EDN, 1998 June 04, p.155, as well as the previously mentioned catalogs, which are from Chomerics and Metex. Amuneal Mfg. has mumetal shields. Paul |
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